In Depth: Elements of School-Linked Services
Schools are a natural place for students to receive mental health support due to the extensive amount of time they spend in educational settings. Students identified as at risk for mental health issues are more likely to receive adequate support if these services are provided in school rather than in the community. Therefore, it is important that school staff members consider the mental health needs of their students and collaborate with mental health professionals to create school-linked services. The following strategies provide school teams with a process to identify, select, implement, monitor, evaluate, and adapt evidence-based behavioral and mental health practices within schools. Schools implementing school-linked mental health services should:
Example: A person is learning to request a break with a nonverbal cue rather than running out of the room. Whenever the person requests a break, the interventionist immediately releases the person from the task he is working on and lets him have a short break. This is an example of immediate reinforcement. If the person requests a break and the interventionist does not immediately release him from the task he is working on, then the reinforcement is delayed (i.e. not immediate).
Evaluation and outcome data are used to select and monitor prevention and intervention strategies, implementation integrity, and staff training.
Source: Evans, S.W., Simonsen, B., & Dolan, G. (2013). School-level practices. In S. Barrett, L. Eber, M. Weist (Eds.) Advancing education effectiveness: Interconnecting school mental health and school-wide positive behavior support. (pp. 46-57).